The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 61, No. 118, Ed. 1 Friday, July 24, 1953 Page: 1 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Chickasha Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
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Ml1 VttvMMM
Drew
Pearson
h ww af ! Iita Ow m aea
M Mil MUIWIUI IMMlaK K
y Ml lUM iMOp lMl
AHIIINGTON COP lead
1 1 bk to admit w buy they ir
l.y KMiwtal lht Ul KtbM Mr.
uliliran fire. llidirrt A. Tati
be tarred to retire within ik
his lul taurtad off M barhsUg
'! wit hmM of lb Amato
rh lb Rmubliraiw tan run by
im majority erf ana. Taft' i
ir wuuM be appointed by a
innrrati Otoef Uv. Pranb
et. Ibmever. Drmorraur
let have already cnnaultod
iirha privately. and ward bun
iimnl a Iti-publlcan They
tard that lha Democrat don't
.I iwtiwmilrtlliy tor lha teat
yp biaiam that la build ma up to
Smile. la Iba and. Ihm figure
v will gain more vnlra by leap-
tha frost to COP band
ti a result. Lausche la cwwid
ig Bub Tall'a younger brothrr.
rlta tor lha raprefed vacaory.
rAanir-oo-aovND
malor McCarthy la tiylag to
it up Ma aaanetatioa with
ph Moure. a shady commodity
y reulatnr who wac blrfced off lha
JIumodKy aaebanaa. Inaida fart
la that Moore baa been
ml aa a front for McCarthy
the commodity market. When
amator collected 110000 to
Hit Communiata and diverted H
trad to buying aoybeana to hie
.thrr'i name the applicatiorw
ra made out la Moorc'a band-
ting ... McCarthy baa hinted
rkly that Father Leon Sullivan.
::atholir miasionary. received an
i-rdaee r l Communiat propagan-
while w languiahcd in a Chi-
c prism ceil. What upaet the
iiator waa Father Sullivan'a
rnmei 1 that be would rather re--n
to bia Red priana than aee
icCa- byiam" riao to America.
ie courageous Catholic declared:
ly miaaionary career la China
'ed in a Communiat court la
iich aceueationa were taken aa
i-te charges aa proofs and in
ich the police announced that
tense is not necessary; we nee-
make n mistake; when we gr-
it you youre guilty. Ai a re
it of that experience. I ding dew
Irately to o principle that la one
the foundation atones of our
mocretic way of life the priori-
that a man la innocent until
aved guilty ... If you must he-
re democracy in order to save
why bother?
Jewish leaden were outraged
er McCarthy' charge that Benin-
' Mike Monroney. Oklahoma
mocrat ia anti-aemitic. They not
ily regard Monroney as a fair-
inded American hut they point
it that all the profeaaional Jew
tors from Gerald L. JC Smith
down an backing McCar-
y ... Senators report that moat
their pro-McCarthy mail eon-
:t of unsigned crackpot letters
iling against Communists and
ws. . McCarthy's strategy hack-
led when he threatened to sue
Americana for Democratic Ae-
and Beacon Press for diatrib-
ing copies of the Senate report
his finances. He expected them
hide behind congressional im-
unlty since the report la an offl-
!al Senate document Instead
' offered to waive all immunity
id invited him to sue . . . McCar-
tys crocodile tears over the three
emoents who walked out on his
'immlttee dont impress fellow
Inators. They remember how be
talked out on the Malmedy invee-
gation when information turned
) that McCarthy's defense of the
izl war eriminala was Inspired
German Communists who
iped to undermine U. 8. prestige
i Germany. As late aa March 10
fcCarthy aided with GOP Sen.
in Williams of Delaware who
uit a Senate finance aubcommit-
in protest over the chairman's
ictatorial tactics. Commented Me-
arthy: "I should like to eongratu-
ite the senator from Delaware tor
iking the action he has taken in
ng himself from that auto
immlttee."
' aPPY ARGENTINA
i Milton Eisenhower President of
enn State and Ike's unofficial am-
assador to Latin America re-
vived an auspicious welcome to
rgentina. where the semiofficial
ewspaper Democracia said there
ould be no trouble between the
!. S. A. and Argentina were it not
v critical North American new-
apers. (The A. P. and U. P. have
oth been kicked out of Argentina.)
: Simultaneously however. Pe-
rns gestepo has found an rfn-
ient means of banishing criticism.
( has thrown more than 9999 peo-
le into prison tor broadcasting
jmors against the government.
. In Perona more recent speeches
e has said he would send to Jsil
uyene who makes comment
gainst the government even
lough those comment are made
mong friends or white standing to
ne to buy food.
As a result criticism of the gov-
rnment is disappearing from Bus
oa Aires. Argentines who ca-
ressed themselves about file scar-
tty of meat or the high price of
lilk end butter merely go to aiL
WASHINGTON WHIRL
The White Hbue ha received a
onfidential report that President
Isenhower's famous popularity is
a tha wane. The report says that
o ten who east their ballots for
are no longer boasting of it
. . The report blamed Ikes de-
i lining popularity largely on skid-
ling farm prices and rising fnter-
Ut rates. The President still has
(Continued On Page S)
I?
C! Year Nn III
Current Rains
Lift Juiy Total
To 5.34 Inches
1950 High Mark
Remains Record;
More Possible
Even though .14 of an torh rf
rainfall was nwd m the my
Thursday night ami early Inlay
bringing the July toted to 4
torbvs lha para Is far behind the
record.
In the sfllni July during tha
pari fa rears (klrbaafea bad II
Inrbee to lM. Isd year lha
July rainfall waa Ml Inrhrs.
The city had Ml Inches to July.
1444 then suffered through four
drTtwrJrwa atlll a chance to
heal IBIS during Uie nrsi rigM
days. The weaiiieff forecast to lay
called for continued rteudincM
and posaible showers bmight.
Ltabt showers spaded the
eeuHlr Thursday but nu terse
amuuut uf MuMure waa resort-
ed. High temperature to tha city
Thursday waa Ml decrees and the
overnight low was Hi. It was li
at tha CMbut Research Station
with no rainfall recorded.
Mure scattered rains on top of
showers and deluge ia the past
M hours are expected ia Oklaho-
ma through today and tonight.
Western areas of the state espe-
cially. are expected to receive add-
id moisture
Payne County apparently bad
the most rain overnight with Cush-
ing reporting SJ7 inches and Per-
kins IA Stillwater also to that
county had only a half inch.
Spaded Reports
Other reports were spotted. Mus-
kogee had 1JS inches. McCurtain
1.T0 Fanshaws 1.T4 Haskell IN
Fwteau 1.44 Snyder 1.T5 Heavener
.M and downtown Tulsa M in
astern Oklahoma. .
Other section of the state In-
cluded Fargo Jf. Enid -7S. Ponca
City M. Ralston M. Hobart IS.
Frederick 1.60 white Oklahoma
City had about a half inch on the
north side and very little in the
downtown section.
Woodward was soaked by a
minute downpour which filled the
streets with water. Nearly two in-
(See Page 4 No. 4)
Crowd Hears
Turnpike Talks
Two old school mates Lyman
Beard of Muskogee and Norman
Reynolds of Oklahoma City de-
bated tell roads Thursday night
In Norman before an audience
jammed with school teachers.
Tha opponents to the debate
were members of tha 1MI class
at the University ef Oktehcma.
Mr. Beard president ef the Ok-
lahoma Free Reads Association
ia mayor of Muskogee. Mr. Rey-
nolds member of the state leg-
islature. ta eo-author ef the toll
road Mil passed by the Home.
Carlo Baker represented Grady
County at the meeting. He is the
son .of Ftank B. Baker Grady
County chairman of the state free
roads group.
Mr. Baker said a tape recording
of the debate will be broadcast by
station KWCO at a date to ba an-
nounced. The OU chapter of College Dem-
ocrats sponsored the debate. It
waa held in the university law
building.
Teacher attending summer
school and members of die Cleve-
land County league of women
voters made up the bulk of the
audience.
President Gets .
Power To Help
Starvinq People
WASHINGTON Ul Brood au-
thority for President Eisenhower
to send 100 million dollars worth
of surplus farm products to friend-
ly nations or peoples was unani-
mously recommended to the Sen
ate today by its Agriculture Com-
mittee. Chairman Aiken (R-Vt) said the
legislation would allow sending
food or other sironlies to friendly
people even if they are behind
the Iron Curtain if thin aided the
cold war.
As originally proposed by the
administration there would have
been no legal limit on the amount
of surplus food the President could
have used for famine relief. The
committee put in the 10 million
dollar limit and also extended file
plan to friendly "peoples as wen
as nations.''
Aiken predicted quick Senate
passage of the measure probably
early next week.
Un-Draftable
CONCORD. N. Y. to They
finally gat arawnd to sending
James Cress Willefard Ir. hie
draft regtatratien certificate.
WHfefard registered an BepL
IS. ltllL
There's little Hketiheed Hut
bell eheulder arms. He's M
yean aid.
IljtrtaIa
"Oklahoma's
Tastes Fsise
1NWAXTMI rAHKENGKR-Ted Hamenn. 14. Houston. Teas waa
arreted by this cum whm he went to the garage to get hi mother s
car. After efforts of lha family failed to remove the animal more
expert handlers from the Humane Drparlmenl were rolled. Wait-
ing for die corn's removal are (L-R) Susan Garwood; Tad llamaim
and Jon Bennett
United
States
Survey
By KENNETH FINK. Dkretar
Frinretoa Research Henries
A majority of tha nation's voters
questioned this month by United
Slates Poll staff reporters say they
favor reducing the voting age from
21 to M.
And a sizable group more this
two out of every five are opposed
to lowering the voting age.
In ether wards voters aemss
tha catkin who favor ktUng 14
year aMs vote aolnambcr k a
margin of a beat five to fear
these appeeed to sarh aetlaa.
These were the findings when
Princeton Research Services
United States Poll staff reporter!
asked the following question of a
representative cross section of the
state's adult voters:
Would you favor or oppose re-
ducing the age at which American
citizens can vote from twenty-one
to eighteen?
The vote:
Nationwide
Favor 5
Oppose 42
No opinion 2
An interesting sidelight in to-
day's survey is tha change in opm
ion on the matter of U year olds
voting since 1949.
In that year. Princeton Research
Service surveys ahotred that
(Sea Page 4 No. 1)
Rehabililion
Fund Talked
WASHINGTON W President
Eisenhower and Republican con-
gressional leaders decided today to
seek an Initial fund of 299 million
dollars for rehabilitation of Korea
after an armistice.
The decision was reached at a
White House breakfast meeting.
Secretary of the Treasury Humph-
rey and Budget Director Joseph
M. Dodge sat to with the Presi-
dent and the Republican lie-w-makers
for the 90-minute session.
Plans Farmed
House Speaker Martin said the
administration hopes a truce will
be signed soon. He added that
ptens already are under way for
rehabilitation of the war-torn coun-
Sen. Knowland (R-Calif). acting
plana already are under way tor
rehabilitation of the war-torn coun-
Sen. Knowland (R-Calif) acting
majority leader of the Senate pt
dicted ESSi'm complete "thT SSr'rttiT their
a request J"1 nameand address and put it to
lionjolUr fundwiUbeswrovefl the box inside the gate at tonight's
hr Congress before it adjourns.
Confidence
He expressed confidence that ad-
journment will come by July 21
despite k considerable list of bill
on which Eisenhower wants action.
Knowland estimated the cost of
entitimiing the fighting in Korea
for another year would ba about r
habilitatioa -actually would come
out of the defense appropriation
for continuing the war and that
in effect there would be h saving of
one Milton dollars.
Kerr Monroney Vote
For AF Fund Boost
WASHINGTON Ul Senators I
Robert S. Kerr and Mike Monroney 1
at Oklahoma yesterday voted for
aa amendment which would have
added 400 million dollars to Air
Force funds to buy additional jet
bombers. The Senate however
voted 55-38 against the move. .
In the House the entire Okla-
homa delegation voted with the
majority in killing a bill to increase
tariff protection tar American Industry
yi;:oai:v. sscisn
5 r cur osu
Most Interesting And
WlCKASIIA
We Saw
Mrs. Fred Fields giving voice
to loud shriek when a young-
ster shoved a toy snake ta her
face . . Holes to South 10th
and Illh being filled . . . Mrs.
Francs Carter saying. "If mit-
priaing what you find. as aha
started house cleaning on a fil-
ing cabinet ... Mrs Albert
Meads telling about her son.
Cedi who has graduated from
an Army Engineer school ta
Germany.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob' Fulton Jr.
taking a Jay ride ta an old
pickup and saying it waa a lot
more fun than n new car . . .
Rev. Bill Wright with a Mg
accomplishment from his vaca-
tion. He kerned to water ski...
Mrs. Gilncrt Douglas of Veiden
who reads Korean war news
closely. Her husband k with
signal company . . . And Bob
Roden Rush Springs melon fes-
tival entertainment chairman
needing a replacement for Csia
Peevey WKY-TV singing ..-
let She's now on tha Hoagy
Carmichael telecast from Holly-
Officers Hunt
Crashed Plane
AVERY Okla. UN-High way Pa-
trol and Lincoln County officers
converged on this re in-sos ked area
of east central Oklahoma after a
farm woman reported an airplane
caught fire and crashed today.
Mrs. Paul McLaury who Uvea
two miles from hate said she
heard tha plana fly near her home n in
about 6:29 a. m heard a bolt of atd W. Hall of the G.P
lightning strike and then aaw the Committee was Included among the
(See Page 4 No. 7) conferee indicated that politics aa
Program
On Silver
Despite sporadic showers early
today the 8:15 Paducah - Chief
Silver Dollar" game tonight was
still on" at noon.
Union it rains too heavily dur-
ing late afternoon the game will
ba played.
Pint National Bank will pre-
vide tha 175 ia sash prises of
154 U and 14 to fans attend-
ing tonight's gsase.
Everyone k eligible for tiie
awards except members ef the
firm and their families.
A apodal coupon appeared in
Thursday's issue of The Express
and reappears today. Fans should
m CUT OUT AND DROP
"Silver
(For $50-$ 15-$
I
i :
ArfrfreM
'
.CUT OUT AND DROP Of CHIEFS FARK BOI
a
irnttf feqitw
Most Readable Daily Newspaper"
OKIllOMA. HUP AY. JfLY
Brother Of Ike
Quoted In Story
On McCarthy
Arthur Compares
Tactics In Uso
During Probes
WASHINGTON lP-fim. McCar-
thy R Wist ralltd today on Ar-
thur bmfosrr. Iba rvslllrM'S
brother to eunlirm er dear Uiel
be railed ihe srnabar um most
daagrrtau mmare la Amerkra.
this rslitila rousrr.
Arthur Fj-rahuwrr was so qtarf.
d Iasi tugM m a ntyriahtd story
in lha La Vraas. Nv.. Hun. This
paper la puMishrd hr Hank lint
spun who has team mitral ef Mc-
Carthy. McCarthy ktid a rciaeirr today:
I wouldn't bvliove anything that
Gtemspun said awn if he said H
under oath. It now la up to Arthur
Eisrnhuwrr to confirm or tfepy
what Urvraspun's newspaper has
quoted bun aa saying.
No Grade
"And even if be says he w
quoted eumvtly I couldn't hold
that against Preskienl Eisenhower.
I dont hold Ik rcsponsiM for
what bis relatives say.
Arthur Eisenhower Kansas City
was ta Las Vegas to attend a Trims
World Airlines directors' meeting.
Efforts to reach him today were
not immediately sucoeaafuL
His Kansas City office said he
was expected Back ta Kansas City
later today. '
Bran Flannelly Las Vegas Sun
reporter quoted Arthur Eisenhow-
(Sce Pag 4. No. I)
Deadline Set Sept. 4
On Turnpike Petition
OKLAHOMA CITY IN The
deadline for lha Tiling of petitions
which call for a vole of the peo-
ple oa three new turnpike propos-
als k Sept 4.
That was the ruling of Assistant
Ally- Gen. Fred Hansen.
Referendum petitions era being
circulated by free roads boosters
who want to Mock action on the
near legislation. The petitions must
be signed by soma 47.509 voters
to ba effective.
Farm Leaders Ike
Plan Talks Today
WASHINGTON Obviously well as agriculture was on tha dia-
eonccrned about the effect of the cussion agenda.
a a i-g-tkm of term state eon- iota chairman of the Housc ap-
gressmen arranged to talk it over pwpriations subcommittee on agri-
- - - - - culture helped arrange the meet-
7w.'.njy the group of House
Reoutdicana requested the White
Bouse meeting foe a general dia-
union of term problems.
raiitka betaded
But the fact that Chairman Leon-
Planned
Dollars
la charge ef arranging
special events.
' Paducah will be here tonlHht
ymi gnirrfiy night lor thdr final
appearances of tha regular aea-
Chief victories over the Red-
birds could reshuffle the loop
standings. .
Fins con expect to sec some of
the best games of tha searon as
the five league teams go into tne
final two weeks of regular season
pipy
Each club will be Jockeying
for n berth to the playoff brack-
et tha top four. The fifth place
deb win be kft eat to the cold
for this season at less.
Paducah boasts at least one
All-American baseball player on
its squad 21 -year-old Mickey
Sullivan. RedMrd seeondbaseman.
The Chlefa will he out to halt
the rampaging Redbirda and
stretch thdr two-game winning
streak.
IN CHIEFS FARK BOX
I
I
Dollar" Coupon
10 Friday Night)
24 lilij
Msmbsf
IRecHs UincorE
Mew AGkadtsj
Alines SGofffeini
USSR-Built Rockets Slam
UN Areas Before Jumpoff
SEOUL Saturday (1) Savage Chinese Red attack by
pnliaiM 5000 men lashed last nluht at three hilltop outpueto
on tlw Korean Weatwn Front northeast of llie truce-talk
town of ranmunjim.
An effirrr at Urn front reported Chines were In the
I re nr hr en lire ef Ihe fcilla end Allied auldirra were
fighting with hnyrnirla end gun bulla.
We still hold 50 per cent of the hilts the officer said.
Tlte Chinese unleashed fiery barrage of Russian-made
Katusha rockets on Outpost Esther.
The Reds alse throw In heavy artillery end mortar
barrages.
Allied artillery in counter-fire cut up two Chinese efforts
to reinforce the attack. Eerie flares lit the sky.
Truce
May Be
Sunday
Tne uen nil jus nw SEOUL. Saturday 111 A usually
and apparently weI reliable source said last night ihe
ftwrgh knairw hmiiifW RlKaflUnito v sssiBiine nwdiehlw will hfi
U. WiUam II. Bates
Portland. Maine radioed bach
from Oulpnsl Esther In the beet
of ihe fighting: '
Holding. Doing fine. Will con-
tinue to h4d as long aa the am-
munilkin holds. ...
AP Cnrwpondrql John lUnoolph
reported from the Central Front
two Chinese companies attacked
a hill seized by tha South Korean
earlier.
bdgM UplhA
The Reds hit just after sundown
ad apparently were beal-
two hours before midnighL
There was desultory tlahting
throughout the day on four hills
in the area northeast of Kumhwa.
One of the bilk had been retaken
from ihe Red by Ore South Ko-
reans but the other three were
still in Communist hands despite
the South Korean efforts.
Sketchy frontline report mid
lha Chines swarmed over Allied
(See Page 4 No. 2)
Rep. H. Carl Andersen of Minne-
1
fog and told newsmen the general
term picture woukl be discussed.
He said no specific legislation was
on j
Asked if tha presence of Han
meant Ihsit Pitics also
come to lor consideration. Ander-
en said You can draw your own
contusions.'
BwMiy Andersen and Hail oth-
ers invited to the session Included
Chairman Hope of the House Agri-
culture Committee end Reps. Har-
vey (Ind) Horen (Wash) Hoeven
(Iowa) Lovre (SD) Hill (Colo)
and August H. Andresen (Minn).
Republican political strategists
are known to bo concerned about
dropping term prices. Much of tha
Republican strength in tha House
is from term states but the GOP
chieftains remember that to tit
1949 election! when farmers were
discontented the Republicans tost
not "iy the presidential election
but control of Congress which they
had held. . .
They dont want that to happen
again next year when all House
seats and a third of the Senate
will be at stake. The GOP now
controls both branches by only
hairline margins.
Shear Buys
Grady Leases
A seven-year oil and gas lean
covering 109.5 acres of tend at the
southwest edge 'of Hush Springs
has been sold by Mrs. Roy Multi-
can and Odya Jolley of Rush
Springs to Warren Shear for IL
500.
pftperty included In the lease
waa described as the NE SW N
NW NW the W E NW NW except
a m - a-
for one and one-half acres north
of the highway and the NW SW
of 22-4-7.
. A. J. Baalish and A. J. Bag-
I to Jr said a acvea-year teas
19 seres af land ta the same
locality to Mr. Shear far 23A99.
ITh lease covers E SW SW SE
SW and SW NW of 224-7.
I Mrs. Anna Blanche Holliday
I1 who holds one If mineral inter-
'I ast Mrs. Stella F. Davis Morgan.
I' who holds one-fourth interest and
1 Mrs. Broneta Daria a one-fourth
' ! interest holder sold a 10-year
I lease 00 IN acres of land to J.
J. Wright at Tulsa for 1500.
"j The quarter section la the SW
J! of tM and ia nine and three-
I fourths miles southwest at Mtoca
Atsariaterf fmt
Korean armistice probably will ba
signed Sunday. Official confirma-
tion was lacking.
The informant who Is dose to
Ihe truce talks but cannot other-
wire be identified said only a last-
minute hitch stemming from Pres-
ident Syngman Rhee's opposition
could Mock tha signing.
The informant said announce-
ment of the signing date could ba
expected today. Ha said he did not
know tha contemplated hour at the
ceremony .which would formalin a
cease-fire in the war. now more
than three year old.
The signing date probably was
set. tentatively at least hy senior
liaison officers at a meeting to
Panmunjom Friday afternoon.
A foil-dress session of the main
delegation might be held today to
approve the date.
Rhee angrily denounced the ar-
mistice agreement Friday saying
soma of the Allied promises to
the Reds cannot be allowed to
happen."
Rhees new threats brought no
Immediate reaction at Panmun-
jom where the liaison officers met
or hours 4 minutes Friday
then recessed without scheduling
another session.
The stubonm old South Korean
(Sea Page 4 Na B)
'Super Value'
Day Planned
Local merchants have scheduled
a meeting for Tuesday to wo
out details for a Super Value
Day on Aug. 20.
Delbert Hicks chairman ef
the trade promotion committee
said the project win be Chick
ache's greatest promotion ta a
tong time.
Mr. Hicka and Pete Ross secretary-manager
of the Chamber
of Commerce visited Duncan re-
cently to study tha plan which
was said to have been employed
successfully there.
The promoting includes Open-
ing the doom of the theatres for
free movie. Reuben Cochran has
assisted the chairman with pre-
liminary work.
Tsesday's meeting will be at
19 a.m. to tha Faille Service
Company auditorium. .
Having set Aug. 20 as the ten-
tative date the merchants moved
September Dollar Day to the 14th.
It was originally scheduled on
Labor Day.
Wet really going to let our
hair down for this said Mr.
Hicks. Tha merchants are going
to have some rock bottom prices.
Treatment
ENID Okla. C A 19-year-old
uuu wu. v-1
garage employe Dale Young was
under treatment today far a enwh-
ILImI miffaarel maafnMtMi Dfllfill
ed thigh suffered yesterday when
an auto pinned him against a
garage wall.
Good Address
- CENTERVILLE. Hi to -Anne
Green 7. may set knew
hew to spell Maryland. hat
ha knows tha testily telephone
amber.
Sa. thats haw she sddrrmrl
a letter beam fraaa Ctonp Tadd
ear Deaton MA
The letter waa addremed to
Mr. im Mrs. Edward Green.
Centrerill 5S-M. U waa de-
bt day after It
District WiiikM
tuiiiutuMl ttaudy; ahonara
puMIbla I-( I.
Ia 1 I p. n
balay IK; Twnl high Hi
lM4iy hn M. Hsiittaii 14
uitii.
frlc I Unit
Council Rejects
Gas Rond Bid;
Interest High
Re-Advertising
Dote Not Set;
Delay Requested
Only I iid an the 9l.mn.kao to mu-nh-ilMl
hnnrf iilfered for sale at
the Thursday aiehl steeling af Ihe
i'll y CiMM-t! was r jetted.
Neat step for the rounrg will
he ta rrsdverlh for Mde. How
ever no dale ess srL
R. J. Edwards and assnclala af
Oklahoma City preseuled the only
tori. It aked hr hmr per rent
Interest. In dollar and rents this
meant bdal Hderesl uf KHIT 4.
TWo krai bankers discussed the
heat market siluslum and advised
Hi rnunril to wait until the mar
kcl ads brtlrr.
Hue to Uw Uaklaeoa af Iba
hoed market a ad speaking aa a
taaparrr aad a wins la le rested
ta Uw rllr I wanld reremawnd
lha canarM rejrrl lha hid." aald
K. M. AHea pwsideat af Fin
National hash.
We've seea belter times and
rales to Ihe bund market and be
lieve It will be to Ihe best interest
of the rliy to wail."
F. T. Chandler of Oklahoma Na
Uimal bank a Im urged Ihe council-
men to reject Thursday night's
tod and asked members to post-
pone rewlvertialng hr three
months
Municipal bpnd market will re
main slaanant hr Ihe neat two or
three moths." he said.
In my opinion the government
bond market bag considerable to
flume on tha municipal market.
The government has maturing now
a vast number of bond. Because
of this I don't believe the munici-
pal market will be any bettor for
the next few months."
Following (His Uw council re-
cessed hr a brief period into Uw
office of ally manager. Bidders
at the meeting also went into a
huddle.
Without reachtag a satisfactory
agreement Uw cease li pasaed a
motion to reject Uw ana bid.
In other council action Thurs-
day night an ordinance establish-
ing a new sanitary sewer district
covering Blocks 2 and 4 in Elliott's
First Addition and Block 294 af
Chickashas original townsite waa
passed.
Tha city clerk waa authorized to
advertise tor bids for a new police
car.
A continuation certificate was
approved for 91.990 covering Bill
Ferguson city building inspector.
A contract and agreement for
lease of some 40 acres of tend
near the water plant between the
city and George W. Thomas waa
approved. The lease is for from
Jan. 1 1954 to Dee. 31. 1959.
Request of a clvie chib to lease .
a site in Borden park area tor a
circus performance was referred
(Sea Page 4 No. 6)
11 Firms Represented
In One Bid On Bonds
Eleven firms were represented
In the one bid submitted and re-
jected at the city council meeting
Thursday night for the 91100009
in municipal bonds.
John Edwards of the R. J. Ed-
wards Inc of Oklahoma City
presented the bid to the council.
Other firms which he repre-
sented were: First NationJ Bank
and Trust Co Small-Milburn
Co First Securities of Kansas
and Honnold and Cj. of Okla-
homa City; Evan L. lxvi of Tul-
sa; City National Bank and Trust
Co Commerce Trust Co and
Lucas Ereen Waeckerle of Kan-
sas City Mo and Calvert and
Canfield of Oklahoma City. 4
Salvation Army
Board Plans
Fund Campaign
Plana for the annual Salvation
Army financial drive were dis-
cussed at a Thursday night meet-
ing of the Citizens Advisory
Board.
Garland Davis was named cam-
paign chairman. The drive will
open mi Sept- 15. it was reported.
Jo F recce rice chairman at
the beard waa elected chairman
pie tern. He replaces Gwyna
Davidson eh has moved from
Ibt city
Board members also discussed
expansion of tha present Salvation
Army facilities. They made plana
for quarterly meetings.
Annual election of officers will
be on Sept. L
QUICKIES
By Ken Bdynelda
eaa I try to locate tie
with an Express Want
Ai dear 7
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Evans, George H. The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 61, No. 118, Ed. 1 Friday, July 24, 1953, newspaper, July 24, 1953; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1893684/m1/1/: accessed June 3, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.